86 Ky. 23 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion oe the court.
The Legislature of this State, at its last session, passed an act for the benefit of the appellee. The preamble to the act sets ont, in substance, that certain settlements had been made and suits determined be
Three commissioners were appointed as directed by the act. They all accepted the appointment. The arbitration of said matters was made by only two of said commissioners, the third one declining to participate in the arbitration. The two commissioners awarded to the appellee the sum of three thousand eight hundred and
The appellant contends, first, that the act stvpra required all three of the commissioners to participate in the arbitration, and then any two of them might agree in making an award; but as only two of the commissioners participated in the arbitration, the whole proceeding was void.
Section 3, chapter 21, of the General Statutes, on “Construction of Statutes,” provides that “words purporting to give authority to three or more public officers or other persons shall be construed as giving such authority to a majority of such officers or other persons.”
And section 679 of the Civil Code provides that ‘ ‘ an authority conferred by law upon three or more persons may be exercised by a majority of them concurring; and an act directed by law to be done by three or more persons may be done by a majority of them concurring.”
The legislative rule of construction adopted in the General Statutes was, several years thereafter, incorporated in the Civil Code. And we see no reason why the same rule of construction should not be applied to any subsequent legislative act, though of a special nature, which confers authority upon three or more persons to do certain things, unless the language of the act, by express
The fact is alleged in the answer, and not denied, that the act was not passed by a majority of the members then elected. The second contention, therefore, is, that
The act under consideration is not, in the constitutional sense, an appropriation of money, or the creation of a debt. Because the matters which were submitted to arbitration by the act grew out of business transactions that the State had with the appellee many years before, which transactions were doubtless authorized by law, and out of which differences sprang in their repeated attempts to settle. So, the act did not attempt to make an appropriation or to create a debt, but to adjust and settle, by arbitration, any legal or equitable liability that the State was under, growing out of these business transactions with the appellee, which had been authorized by law. And if the arbitrators found that the State was legally or equitably indebted to the appellee, growing out of these transactions, they were to certify the same to the Auditor, who was to draw his warrant on the Treasury for the amount, not in payment of an appropriation or debt created by the act, but in payment of a liability previously created by law, the amount of which was definitely ascertained by the arbitrators. Therefore, we conclude that the act is constitutional.
The appellant, H. V. Rodman, as the executrix of John Rodman, deceased, sought by her petition and amended petition to be made a party to the action in the court below, for the purpose of asserting a claim of two thousand dollars against the appellee, which she alleged the appellee owed her testate as an attorney’s fee for services rendered in aiding the appellee before legislative committees, etc., to get the act under consideration passed, as well as preceding acts looking to the same end, and for other services appertaining to the appellee’s claim. She also asserted an attorney’s lien on the sum awarded to the appellee. She also sought to have the court to direct the Auditor to issue his warrant to her for said sum. The court dismissed her petition and amended petition without prejudice. She has appealed to this court.
A mandamus proceeding, as defined by section 477 of the Civil Code, “ is an order of a court of competent and original jurisdiction, commanding an executive or
The appellee, by his petition, was not seeking to recover judgment for any money or property. His right to the' money was not legally involved ; that matter had already been adjudicated, and his right established by a competent tribunal. He was merely asking the aid of the court to compel a ministerial officer to perform an act enjoined by law. The duty of that offi-r cer was to issue the warrant directly to the appellee, and the court’s jurisdiction was limited to directing the officer to issue the warrant to the appellee without any conditions or qualifications whatever. And for the court to permit a third party to come in and litigate his claim with the appellee, upon the ground that he had some sort of a lien upon the debt which the State owed the appellee, would open Tip a system of practice inconsistent with this character of proceedings. Suppose the appellee had recovered a common law judgment in a circuit court against an individual, and upon the refusal of the clerk to issue execution upon the judgment, he had sought the aid of the court to compel the clerk to issue the execution, would it be contended that his attorney could interplead and litigate and establish his right to his fee, and have the same indorsed on the execution for his benefit % Surely not. The cases are similar.
The judgment of the lower court as to both cases is affirmed.